Welcome to Hyperion Records, an independent British classical label devoted to presenting high-quality recordings of music of all styles and from all periods from the twelfth century to the twenty-first.

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Woodlands

Introduction

The author tells that it was in May 1961, after reading these verses from St Luke in a review copy of the New English Bible, that he wrote this hymn. The first line follows exactly as the opening of the Magnificat stands in that translation, and this gave him the metre which he uses. Thereafter this is a free paraphrase, picking up only a phrase here and there. Nevertheless we feel that we are indeed singing the sense of Mary’s song of praise. It is an important hymn in that it showed that a truly modern hymn could be written that was as firmly based in the Bible as any by Charles Wesley, and that well-written lines could be picked up by a good tune and become truly contemporary praise. It has been published in almost every hymn book in English since that time and was one of those important hymns that led to the explosion of new hymn writing from about 1970 onwards.

The author gained a love of poetry from his schoolmaster father. He felt the call to the ministry of the Anglican church in his early teens. He was already writing poetry and at Cambridge a good deal of comic verse (he calls that ‘an invaluable part of learning the trade’). He worked as a curate in London and for the Billy Graham Crusade, then for the Church Pastoral Aid Society, a home missionary society. He worked with Michael Baughen on Youth Praise 1 and 2, which became hugely popular. Psalm Praise followed. He moved to be Archdeacon of Norwich and then in 1981 Bishop of Thetford. His way of working in his busiest years was to note scripture references, ideas on metre, themes, requests, which he then worked into hymns on his summer vacations. He is now in a busy retirement.

The composer was director of music at Gresham’s School, Holt, Norfolk, and it is another tune in the tradition of public school worship, with a strong melody intended for the school chapel. It was set to these words in 1969 and is now securely wedded to them.

The Huddersfield Choral Society presents some of our nation's most loved hymns, a range attempting to cover an unaffected, pure lyricism through to a vast, full-throated sound that might shake the rafters of the sturdiest church.» More